Description: Rossignol Reserve Snowboard - Womens

Definitely the perfect ladies beginner board, the Rossignol Reserve Snowboard 148cm will turn heads on the slope. You won't be disappointed in the price or the performance. The solid wood core is built to reduce bad vibrations, and the radius sidecut makes sweeping 's' turns a breeze, easing you into the world of snowboarding. These boards will function well in crud, powder, or well groomed terrain. We like that! You can't beat the design either, definitely hot!

Key Features of Rossignol Reserve Snowboard:

All Terrain Style

Radius Sidecut

Wood Core ECO

Easy 3.3K Base

Factory Base Finish

Glossy Top Sheet

Reserve

Staff Review

Dave Says

Hi, I'm Tim from Rossignol, the Midwestern snowboard rep. Today, I am talking to you guys about the Rossignol Reserve snowboard. This is basically our first price-point women's snowboard. We use a full wood core, which is kind of the industry standard here. We use a radius side-cut. It's a directional snowboard with sidewall. The claim to fame on this guy is that it is extremely easy to initiate a turn, extremely easy exit a turn. The Rossignol Reserve snowboard will take you from that beginner to intermediate in no time at all.

BEen riding this for a few seasons. This board I think is a 2012. I started to learn on this and have kept it around as I am growing into it. Its labled as a beginner, but even as an advanced intermediate, I think this board holds up well. Very easy to ride a play around with. Its kind of an inbetween freeride and freestyle. I am happy and its solid

This Rossignol Reserve Snowboard is not a Channel System board, it has a 4x4 mounting pattern. If you purchase the Burton Stiletto Snowboard Bindings (non-EST) the will be able to be mounted with the correct discs that come with the bindings. If you purchased the Burton Stiletto EST Snowboard Bindings they will not mount on the Rossignol Reserve Snowboard.

Hi, what is the profile of the board? Is it a (V-) rocker? Or Camber, or? And is it directional twin? I'm new to this and need an easy forgiving board :-)

A shopper
on Dec 11, 2014

BEST ANSWER:I'm not sure what they claim the camber to be on this board. What I do know is that it's a directional twin, and it seems to be pretty forgiving. I bought it for my daughter as a first board last year, and she's doing fine on it. She had gone once or twice a year for the previous three years, and three times last year and seems to be handling it just fine. It seems to be a board you can grow into. When she has problems on the hill, they are hers, not the board's. And on her good days she can keep up with me on my Library Tech Landvik Pro.

BEST ANSWER:I'm not sure what they claim the camber to be on this board. What I do know is that it's a directional twin, and it seems to be pretty forgiving. I bought it for my daughter as a first board last year, and she's doing fine on it. She had gone once or twice a year for the previous three years, and three times last year and seems to be handling it just fine. It seems to be a board you can grow into. When she has problems on the hill, they are hers, not the board's. And on her good days she can keep up with me on my Library Tech Landvik Pro.

Unfortunately I have no idea what some of that means :( I know my daughter boards in both directions if that's what twin means. I also can tell you that she is an intermediate snowboarder leaning more towards beginner than expert. We bought this board specifically for the purpose of it being forgiving and that she loves it. she uses it in colorado on the intermediate hills of copper mountain and it is perfect for her

I'm fairly new to snowboard purchasing myself :). But, I purposely chose this board because it was "forgiving." It's made for a beginner/intermediate rider that is looking for more slope time than stunts. If I remember right it's a camber, but I'll check & let you know if it's something different. For me, it's a great board for the price. Hope that helps!